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Peer Pressure, Media Fuel Youth Violence
Impulsive, violent behavior may simply be an effort
to impress friends by a teen who randomly staged the event "so
that the aggressor could claim peer acceptance or prove that he
is a stereotypical 'man,' " believes Dr. Virginia Bishop, assistant
professor in pediatrics and preventive medicine at Northwestern
University Medical School in Chicago.
"It sounds like these teens were concentrating on entertainment
and impressing each other and the camera," adds Judy Myers-Walls,
associate professor in child development and family studies at
Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind. "They knew that it was
good to have fun and impress your friends and that it is fun to
look at videos later."
Adolescents are generally more likely to resolve a conflict
nonviolently in the absence of an audience, adds Bishop. But when
peers are in the picture, adolescents are more likely to resort
to violence to resolve the conflict if they think their peers
would do the same.
Jay Reeve, a psychologist at Bradley Hospital at Brown University
in Providence, notes: "Group pressure can override common sense
fairly easily for these folks.
Teens tend not to have developed
a clear sense of right and wrong, apart from their peers." The
immediate result, he concludes, is that teens are more prone to
impulsive, violent behavior.
Violence is often linked to peer acceptance, agrees Dr. Alice
Sterling Honig, professor emerita of child development at Syracuse
University in New York, as "murderous feelings and triumph of
physical power are glorified and held up as splendors" by society.
What Role Does TV Violence Play?
Experts contend the glorification of violent acts on television
has a great influence on the behavior of teens. "Many teenagers
spend more time with these forms of entertainment than they do
with anything else, including studying and working," asserts S.
Mark Kopta, chairman of the psychology department at the University
of Evansville in Indiana.
"One hypothesis is that these are kids who have been thoroughly
saturated with 'reality TV' and violent TV and movies, to the
point that they combined in a crude way some elements of Candid
Camera with a teenage action flick, with horrible results,"
says Thomas Van Hoose, clinical associate professor of psychiatry
at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School in Dallas.
Myers-Walls observes the new reality television trend instills
in youth a sense of "unreality" that is void of any consequence
for actions.
The combination of intense peer pressure and violence-saturated
media may have a strong effect on teens, bringing about terrible
consequences, these experts agree. According to Kopta, teens who
act out in this manner have an "entitled, self-centered attitude,
poor parenting, envy and anger, and violent examples."
Reference
Source 104
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